On a long-ago trip to Paris, I was shocked to hear the cab driver say, waving dismissively as we passed a long line of elegant (if shabby) buildings that pre-dated the Revolution, “It is all merde — trash from the 18th Century!” New construction in other parts of the world would inspire awe in America, where we treasure the Hollywood sign and where “ancient” (beyond merely “old”) is a church built around the same time as those shabby apartments in Paris. And so, thankfully, we treasure our movie palaces, because palaces themselves are relatively rare here, not to mention ones that were built to serve our great grandparents before there was television or the net or social media. One such people’s palace, the St. George Theatre in Staten Island, which I was fortunate enough to help run in 1976, was where I first fell in love with the grassy smell of ages-old popcorn, which, in the “older” theaters, penetrates velvet drapery, thick wool carpet and plaster. Unlike most structures built in North America, the palaces were built to last, their smells and gilding part of the sanctuary they still offer.

Thankfully, a movement to preserve and restore theaters is afoot nationwide, growing stronger by the year, as people in towns and cities across America revive spaces that started out as theaters and morphed temporarily into supermarkets, tile warehouses, basketball courts, even parking garages.

Several years ago, I attended the League of Historic American Theatres’ national conference in New York City, keen to pass out cards and chat with people from all over the U.S.A. who have gone to the mat for one or another imperiled older theater. As I noted the day after the conference,

“The new theater partisans I sat with...were older and wiser than I was when my friends and I (in our mid-twenties) signed on the dotted line to lease a 2672-seat theater in New York City, expecting to support ourselves from the enterprise. In most cases, the people I met...were less aspiring entrepreneurs than volunteers who had kept their day jobs, even if they did raid the 401K to keep the local Rialto from becoming a Red Lobster. That hypothetical Rialto, is these days likely a not-for-profit, eligible for grant money and tax abatements. As my husband (a former partner in our long-ago misadventure) is quick to point out, “We were a not-for-profit — we just didn’t know it!”

It’s important in this tear-down culture to celebrate the salvation of lovely old buildings (even if that Parisian taxi-driver might consider them recently-built merde). A successful theater restoration project at the Fox Theatre in Hanford, CA deserves attention. On March 20, 2014, that theater’s once magnificent ceiling collapsed. The man behind the restoration effort, one Dan Humason, walked into the theater and thought a bomb had gone off. “Every chair in the 1,055-seat theater was covered in white powder and debris....” Two years and four million dollars later, the theater and its ceiling have been restored, the original electric stars shining — lit, these days, by LED technology.

Humason is, apparently, a go-to kind of guy: “If I run out of projects,” he told the Fresno Bee, “I’ll die.” He confesses that the theatre “owns me,” a sensation I recall from my theater management days forty years ago, while I had the privilege of locking and unlocking the St. George Theatre. With its 2672 only partially broken seats, its tar-stained chandeliers and leaking dome, the St. George held a group of us hostage — at the very least as servants, at best, as freelance archeologists. Humason makes a connection to archeology too, something about a lost ring under a seat. Spoiler? Nah — read the Fresno Bee!

There are all kinds of theater mavens. I’d like to close with a nod to Matt Lambros, a remarkable photographer whose passion for old theaters shines through his work and words making him, in a way, a visual archaeologist. Here’s a paragraph from his blog (After the Final Curtain), so gorgeous I couldn’t resist sharing it: “As I write this I’m sitting in the audience in one of my favorite abandoned theaters, waiting for a 15-minute exposure to finish. The air smells faintly of stale popcorn and wet paper, and the brightest thing in the room is the finished photograph on the screen of my camera. It’s warm spring days like this, when the contrast between the living and the dying is so stark, that I’m reminded again of the startling beauty of decaying buildings.”

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Victoria Hallerman is a poet and writer, the author of the upcoming memoir, Starts Wednesday: A Day in the Life of a Movie Palace, based on her experience as a movie palace manager of the St. George Theatre, Staten Island, 1976. As she prepares her book manuscript for publication, she shares early aspects of theater management, including the pleasures and pain of entrepreneurship. This blog is for anyone who enjoys old movie theaters, especially for those who love the palaces as they once were. And a salute to those passionate activists who continue to save and revive the old houses, including the St. George Theatre itself. This blog is updated every Wednesday, the day film always arrived to start the movie theater week.